
‘Loki’ Season 2 review: A fun ride through space and time
The Hindu
The first four episodes of ‘Loki’ Season 2 are here, and it is once again time to join the God of Mischief and his compadres on a whirligig of time-slipping, temporal aural extractors, knots of unrefined time and mechanical trousers
Season 1 of Lokiended with Sylvie (Sophia Di Martino), a female variant of Loki (Tom Hiddleston), killing He Who Remains (Jonathan Majors), which resulted in the Sacred Timeline going berserk with an infinite number of branches and realities. Season 2 picks up right after the events of the Season 1 finale, ‘For All Time. Always,’ dealing with the fallout of Sylvie’s actions.
With no one at the Time Variance Authority (TVA) remembering him, including his best buddy TVA agent Mobius (Owen Wilson), Loki is in for a lonely time. He realises there is no time for maudlin meanderings as the branching timelines, with no pruning, will lead to the collapse of the temporal loom and other disasters. With the death of He Who Remains, (that’s slightly ironic) everyone has free choice and can choose to live out their preferred version of themselves, resulting in further splitting of timelines.
The cute cartoon clock and mascot of TVA, Miss Minutes (voiced by Tara Strong), has gone rogue as has Judge Renslayer (Gugu Mbatha-Raw). Loki himself is time-slipping — slipping through time, popping up in the past and present till he is able to reach a time frame where Mobius recognises him.
The two go to meet Ouroboros (Ke Huy Quan), who works in the Repairs and Advancement Department of the TVA and knows everything about every machine in the TVA, which he keeps in working order, apart from writing the TVA Official Handbook.
After guiding them to the relevant pages in the manual, which Loki and Mobius struggle to make sense of, Ouroboros (that pun rocks) tells them the only way to stop Loki from time slipping is to use the temporal aural extractor, rip Loki “violently from every thread of time” and do it right or else all Mobius’ skin would peel off.
In the meantime, in 1982 Oklahoma, Sylvie finds a version of her life that she might get used to. There is however not much rest for the wicked as the branches are getting too great to pass through the loop that holds the temporal loom and unless drastic measures are taken, all will be lost. In a swinging 1977 London, there is a TVA agent who is an action movie star, Brad Wolfe (Rafael Casal). Loki and Mobius end up at the premiere of his latest movie, Zaniac, which Wolfe sniffily explains is an “elevated thriller.”
An inventor/confidence trickster, Victor Timely (Jonathan Majors), who we saw in that end-credit sequence of Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, is showing off his inventions at the Chicago World’s Fair in 1893 where he grandly proclaims “all science is fiction until it is a fact.” Though he shows Renslayer his refrigerator chair, he has to make a precipitous exit when the person he sold the mechanical trousers to, comes calling. Apart from being an inventor of fabled machines, Timely is also an inventor of words including “schadeocracy”.

Sustainability is not an add-on, but stamped firmly into the process: every piece is biodegradable, waste-free and unembellished, free from glitter or beads. “Products should be sustainable and biodegradable so that our planet is not harmed,” says Anu Elizabeth Alexander, a student of Sishya, Adyar. At a recent exhibition, the stars she made sold the fastest, followed by the small diamonds. “I would like people to know about the process, how it is created, and that it is sustainable,” says Anu. Infanta Leon from Kotturpuram developed an interest in crochet as a teenager. It was a hobbyhorse that evolved into a steed that would help her embark on a journey of identity-shaping creative engagement. She started making Christmas-themed decor two years ago, spurred by a desire to craft safe, eco-friendly toys for children. “With a toddler at home, and my elder child sensitive to synthetic materials, I wanted to create items that were gentle, durable and tactile,” she explains. Her earliest creations were small amigurumi toys which gradually evolved into ornaments that could adorn Christmas trees with warmth and charm.












